ETNOS: A LIFE HISTORY OF THE ETNOS CONCEPT AMONG THE PEOPLES OF THE NORTH

  • Anderson, David (Principal Investigator)
  • Alymov, Sergei (Researcher)
  • Arzyutov, Dmitry (Researcher)
  • Shaw, Masha (Researcher)
  • Wahnsiedler, Natalie (Student)

Project: Grant

Project Details

Description / Abstract

Building on the observations of Ernest Gellner, that in Russia and Eastern Europe social and political thought has been incubated specifically within the discipline of ethnography, this project aims to examine the status of ethnogenetic thinking in post-Soviet Russia. The 'etnos' concept, with its radical 'primordialism' has been associated strongly with Soviet state-building creating an unarticulated assumption that theory crumbled along with Soviet institutions. It has been one of the surprises of the post-Soviet transition that 'ethnos-style' thinking not only persists but is a vibrant part of the Russian anthropological context. Given that European and North American anthropologists have traditionally interpreted etnos theory as a sort of deserted island, isolated from the main currents of the discipline, this project aims to rewrite the concept in an active mood demonstrating its evocativeness both to contemporary Russian society and to the discipline as a whole. The project will therefore make use of the interpretative ethnographic techniques developed by historians of science to examine the life history and archaeology of the concept. Although etnos theory has been widely documented and criticised in English language anthropology, this project, through making use of the archived fieldnotes of late Soviet ethnos-theorists, as well as interviewing contemporary ethnos-craftspeople, will be one of the first to write an epistemology of this tradition. To begin to build a bridge between these traditions the project will organise a set of interviews and collate some unique archival materials. Following from the fieldwork,and beyond the project, the authors will publish the work as a collective book manuscript. The impact strategy will build upon a public open-access website of primary documents, several round-table meetings involving Third sector and state representatives, and reports in the mass media.
StatusFinished
Effective start/end date1/08/1331/08/17